Reacurance rectal cancer
Hi there,has any one had a reacurance rectal cancer??
My husband has just been diagnosed with another tumor in the pelvic area
what was the chemo like??
Opertation??
After surgery?? Was there more chemo??
He has no cancer anywhere else..
the surgeon kept saying it will effect his quality of life as it’s near a nerve
sorry for all the questions:)
Comments
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If they are talking about surgery and treatment it could mean radiation with chemo first or just radiation, then surgery, then more chemo, but it all depends on what the surgeon's plans are. Until then, you have to ask a lot of questions. It could mean that the recurrence is close to the sphincter muscle it could mean that he might need an ostomy of some type, but then again that is another discussion with the doctor. Mine was also rectal cancer so if you get a chance read my "about me" page and it might give you some insight as to what I've been through. I'm glad that he has no spreading elsewhere. Wishing your husband luck.
Kim
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Hi.. we have started chemo..
Hi.. we have started chemo.. hes doing the treatment called capox.. tablets and iv
Then surgery
any advice how to cope for the next 3 months
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Capecitabine (Xeloda) and OxaliplatinTracey1969 said:Hi.. we have started chemo..
Hi.. we have started chemo.. hes doing the treatment called capox.. tablets and iv
Then surgery
any advice how to cope for the next 3 months
Tracey: There are a lot of posts on both these drugs. There are definately steps one can take to be prepared--things like having anti-nausea drugs ready in advance, having some gloves (for cold sensitivity), and using hand and foot cream through the treatment. If you seach the posts for these terms, I am confident you will find abundant tips--way more than the doctor will give you. Good luck on this journey.
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It's a big topic. I startedTracey1969 said:Hi.. we have started chemo..
Hi.. we have started chemo.. hes doing the treatment called capox.. tablets and iv
Then surgery
any advice how to cope for the next 3 months
It's a big topic. I started Capox in December and will finish up in about five weeks. It's pretty tough stuff for most - I have run into a very few that got through it with little difficulty.
He would likely get a chest port (minor surgery) for the Oxaliplatin, one of the two drugs. The other drug is capecitabine, with Xeloda as the brand name quite often. He should have had training so he somewhat knows what the potential side-effects are but they often get worse with successive treatments. There are a lot of posts on this regimen and how we deal with the side-effects but I don't think that they're in a convenient location.
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Xeloda and Oxy
Both have their own side effects. The Xeloda (oral) wasn't too bad for me but the Oxy was really hard. If there are symptoms of lingering tingling from one infusion to the other without going away you need to address the doctor and let them know. If not it could be possible there their will be long term side effects from this drug where it causes permanent neuropathy. Capox is not a term I've heard of but mine was FOLFOX. Just make sure that if hubby has anything that doesn't feel right during treatment that he contact the doctor. Wishing him well.
Kim
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itS a kras mutation what
itS a kras mutation what does that mean??
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Tracey1969 said:
itS a kras mutation what
itS a kras mutation what does that mean??
KRAS is a gene that provides the code for making a protein, KRAS, which is involved primarily in controlling cell division. This protein is part of the MAP kinase signaling cascade (RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK) that relays chemical signals from outside the cell to the cell's nucleus and is primarily involved in controlling cell division. KRAS is an enzyme (a GTPase) that converts a molecule called GTP into GDP. When KRAS is attached (bound) to GDP, it's in its "off" position and can't send signals to the nucleus. But when a GTP molecule arrives and binds to KRAS, KRAS is activated and sends its signal, and then it converts the GTP into GDP and returns to the "off" position.
When mutated, KRAS can act as an oncogene, causing normal cells to become cancerous. The mutations can shift the KRAS protein into the "on" position all the time. KRAS mutations are common in pancreatic, lung and colorectal cancers. These KRAS mutations are said to be somatic, because instead of coming from a parent and being present in every cell (hereditary), they are acquired during the course of a person's life and are found only in cells that become cancerous.
Tumor mutation profiling performed clinically at the MGH Cancer Center has identified KRAS mutations across a broad-spectrum of cancer types. The highest incidence of KRAS mutations have been found in pancreatic cancer (70%), colon cancer (30%), lung cancer (25%), cholangiocarcinoma (15-20%), acute myeloid leukemia (15-20%) and endometrial cancer (15-20%). Across the other major tumor types, KRAS mutations have been found in less than 10% of cases that have been tested.
Source: Genetics Home Referencehttp://targetedcancercare.massgeneral.org/My-Trial-Guide/Genes/KRAS/G12D-(c-35G-A).aspx
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Thank u... so u think it’sMikenh said:KRAS is a gene that provides the code for making a protein, KRAS, which is involved primarily in controlling cell division. This protein is part of the MAP kinase signaling cascade (RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK) that relays chemical signals from outside the cell to the cell's nucleus and is primarily involved in controlling cell division. KRAS is an enzyme (a GTPase) that converts a molecule called GTP into GDP. When KRAS is attached (bound) to GDP, it's in its "off" position and can't send signals to the nucleus. But when a GTP molecule arrives and binds to KRAS, KRAS is activated and sends its signal, and then it converts the GTP into GDP and returns to the "off" position.
When mutated, KRAS can act as an oncogene, causing normal cells to become cancerous. The mutations can shift the KRAS protein into the "on" position all the time. KRAS mutations are common in pancreatic, lung and colorectal cancers. These KRAS mutations are said to be somatic, because instead of coming from a parent and being present in every cell (hereditary), they are acquired during the course of a person's life and are found only in cells that become cancerous.
Tumor mutation profiling performed clinically at the MGH Cancer Center has identified KRAS mutations across a broad-spectrum of cancer types. The highest incidence of KRAS mutations have been found in pancreatic cancer (70%), colon cancer (30%), lung cancer (25%), cholangiocarcinoma (15-20%), acute myeloid leukemia (15-20%) and endometrial cancer (15-20%). Across the other major tumor types, KRAS mutations have been found in less than 10% of cases that have been tested.
Source: Genetics Home Referencehttp://targetedcancercare.massgeneral.org/My-Trial-Guide/Genes/KRAS/G12D-(c-35G-A).aspx
Thank u... so u think it’s bad... ? All cancer is bad.. but is this real bad:( I feel the oncologist isnt very hopeful:(
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Great infoMikenh said:KRAS is a gene that provides the code for making a protein, KRAS, which is involved primarily in controlling cell division. This protein is part of the MAP kinase signaling cascade (RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK) that relays chemical signals from outside the cell to the cell's nucleus and is primarily involved in controlling cell division. KRAS is an enzyme (a GTPase) that converts a molecule called GTP into GDP. When KRAS is attached (bound) to GDP, it's in its "off" position and can't send signals to the nucleus. But when a GTP molecule arrives and binds to KRAS, KRAS is activated and sends its signal, and then it converts the GTP into GDP and returns to the "off" position.
When mutated, KRAS can act as an oncogene, causing normal cells to become cancerous. The mutations can shift the KRAS protein into the "on" position all the time. KRAS mutations are common in pancreatic, lung and colorectal cancers. These KRAS mutations are said to be somatic, because instead of coming from a parent and being present in every cell (hereditary), they are acquired during the course of a person's life and are found only in cells that become cancerous.
Tumor mutation profiling performed clinically at the MGH Cancer Center has identified KRAS mutations across a broad-spectrum of cancer types. The highest incidence of KRAS mutations have been found in pancreatic cancer (70%), colon cancer (30%), lung cancer (25%), cholangiocarcinoma (15-20%), acute myeloid leukemia (15-20%) and endometrial cancer (15-20%). Across the other major tumor types, KRAS mutations have been found in less than 10% of cases that have been tested.
Source: Genetics Home Referencehttp://targetedcancercare.massgeneral.org/My-Trial-Guide/Genes/KRAS/G12D-(c-35G-A).aspx
Mike
This is a great resource, thanks much.
Andrea
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TreatmentTracey1969 said:itS a kras mutation what
itS a kras mutation what does that mean??
Others have posted but that was also a question to my doctor but it depended on what treatment you were on that if they would test you for it or not. Mine didn't have that mutation but hope you got the answer you needed.
Kim
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No cancer is good, and no recurrence is ever a happy event.Tracey1969 said:Thank u... so u think it’s
Thank u... so u think it’s bad... ? All cancer is bad.. but is this real bad:( I feel the oncologist isnt very hopeful:(
Any recurrence is bad in the sense that if it spread to ptA, then it may have spread to ptB & ptC too. Recurrence (metastasis) almost always means chemo - if the patient can tolerate it - to addres the systemic spread. The very good news is that IF the recurrent tumor is resectable (surgery applies) then there is a much better chance for long-term survival. Any KRAS mutation gives modestly worse odds and dictates the type of treatment, but that's not a cause for much incremental worry.
>>I feel the oncologist isnt very hopeful:(
Ask, don't read between the lines.
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Thought I’d give u the
Thought I’d give u the lastest
The chemo didn’t shrink the tumor.. but it didn’t grow.. we went and saw the specialist surgeon yesterday.. what he had to say was scary..
there is a 1 in 3 chance of survival in 5 years at this stage.. if we just did surgery next week he would have a life of chronic pain and his foot wouldn't work and still a 33% of survival..
if we do radiation then surgery his survival rate is 50/50 and the chance of keeping his foot etc is better
So we are seeing the radiation team on Monday.. to start pretty quickly
Hopefully like anything no cancer seeds have got out.. fingers crossed
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StatsTracey1969 said:Thought I’d give u the
Thought I’d give u the lastest
The chemo didn’t shrink the tumor.. but it didn’t grow.. we went and saw the specialist surgeon yesterday.. what he had to say was scary..
there is a 1 in 3 chance of survival in 5 years at this stage.. if we just did surgery next week he would have a life of chronic pain and his foot wouldn't work and still a 33% of survival..
if we do radiation then surgery his survival rate is 50/50 and the chance of keeping his foot etc is better
So we are seeing the radiation team on Monday.. to start pretty quickly
Hopefully like anything no cancer seeds have got out.. fingers crossed
Try not to think of the stats. I was given the 5 year talk, 5 years eight months ago, and I'm running wild and loving it.
And what is 50/50? 60/40, 52/48.... do you get what I mean? His situation is not pretty, but concentrate on the positive and let the negative take care of itself.
What is wrong with his foot? Is he diabetic?
Radiation can be quite the ride, and I'm not talking the 'joy' kind. I wish him luck. I wish you both the best.
Tru
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Sorry
Sorry you didn't get better news but don't listen to the doctors or the internet on stats. Every one is different and tolerates things different. I'm not sure how the losing the foot has to do with the colo/rectal cancer? I've not heard of it going that far. Wishing your husband well.
Kim
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The reacurance tumor isAnnabelle41415 said:Sorry
Sorry you didn't get better news but don't listen to the doctors or the internet on stats. Every one is different and tolerates things different. I'm not sure how the losing the foot has to do with the colo/rectal cancer? I've not heard of it going that far. Wishing your husband well.
Kim
The reacurance tumor is growing next to a nerve in leg.. and to get a good margin the would have to server it..
his is rectal cancer.. there’s a lot of nerves down there
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AmputationTracey1969 said:The reacurance tumor is
The reacurance tumor is growing next to a nerve in leg.. and to get a good margin the would have to server it..
his is rectal cancer.. there’s a lot of nerves down there
I do remember, when I first joined this forum (2013), there was a member, English he was, who had his whole leg amputated, possibly from the hip - hard for me to recall. I can't remember why, it might have been because of spread to the bones.
I am sorry that your husband faces this decision. It must be quite rare for CRC.
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StatisticsTracey1969 said:Thought I’d give u the
Thought I’d give u the lastest
The chemo didn’t shrink the tumor.. but it didn’t grow.. we went and saw the specialist surgeon yesterday.. what he had to say was scary..
there is a 1 in 3 chance of survival in 5 years at this stage.. if we just did surgery next week he would have a life of chronic pain and his foot wouldn't work and still a 33% of survival..
if we do radiation then surgery his survival rate is 50/50 and the chance of keeping his foot etc is better
So we are seeing the radiation team on Monday.. to start pretty quickly
Hopefully like anything no cancer seeds have got out.. fingers crossed
The statistics are like a punch in the gut, or at least that is the way I felt when I first researched mine. But as board members will keep reminding you, your loved one is not a statistic. As for me, I do everything I can do to be in the survival portion of the statistic and to live each day to its fullest.
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YesTrubrit said:Amputation
I do remember, when I first joined this forum (2013), there was a member, English he was, who had his whole leg amputated, possibly from the hip - hard for me to recall. I can't remember why, it might have been because of spread to the bones.
I am sorry that your husband faces this decision. It must be quite rare for CRC.
His name was Steved and now remember that this was the first surgery of it's kind. It had spread to the pelvic region. Thanks for the explanation about the nerve, that makes sense now. I'm sorry he is going through this.
Kim
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